Overloaded Communication Session

ABSTRACT

A method of providing information responsive to a request from a wireless communication device involves receiving an information request from a mobile device and generating responsive information for the information request, transmitting a first portion of the responsive information to the mobile device in a first communication session, and transmitting a second portion of the responsive information to the mobile device in a second, overloaded communication session.

CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS

This application is a continuation application of, and claims priorityto, U.S. patent application Ser. No. 14/466,263, titled “OverloadedCommunication Session,” filed on Aug. 22, 2014, which claims the benefitof priority to U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/186,438, now U.S.Pat. No. 8,849,752, titled “Overloaded Communication Session,” filed onJul. 21, 2005. The disclosure of each of the foregoing applications isincorporated herein by reference.

TECHNICAL FIELD

This application relates to establishing connections tobandwidth-constrained communication and computing devices such as mobiletelephones.

BACKGROUND

Mobile devices, such as cellular telephones, often have the capabilityto connect to the Internet in order to browse web pages and access otheronline content. Some current cellular telephones have a client, whichenables the phone to form a connection with an Internet server. Afterthe connection is established, the phone may request information, suchas a web page for viewing, from the server. The server may then respondby transmitting the web page for viewing on the cellular telephone'sdisplay.

In other systems, cellular telephones may have search clients thatcommunicate with remote search engines implemented at Internet servers.Users may enter search terms and select a type of search to transmit tothe search engine. For example, the user may enter the search term “dog”and specify the search type as “images.” This information then may betransmitted to the search engine, which may generate results related tothe search request and transmit the results to the cellular telephone.The cellular telephone could then display the search results, such asthumbnail images of dogs.

Wireless devices, including cellular telephones, may use the wirelessapplication protocol (WAP) for accessing the Internet. The WAP is aspecification that defines how the devices communicate with Internetsystems. A WAP browser client may support languages such as HTML and XMLto enable the display of digital content on a wireless device. However,using the WAP interface to establishing a connection between an Internetserver and the browser may take several seconds.

For example, a browser on a cellular telephone may display a searchpage, which is employed by a user to enter search terms. After enteringa search term and initiating a search, such as a search for images, auser may have to wait 6-8 seconds for the browser to establish aconnection with the remote search engine, which begins to transmit theresults to the phone. After all the results have been transmitted, thebrowser may display them to the user. If the user desires to viewresults of a different search type, such as web page URLs (uniformresource locators), the user may have to wait another 6-8 seconds forthe browser to establish the connection for sending an additional searchrequest and downloading additional results. In addition to such“latency” delay in forming a connection, delay may occur becausewireless connections are relatively slow compared to fixed connections.

Other systems may use Short Message Service (SMS) to communicate withsystems networked through the Internet. SMS enables a wireless device,such as a cellular telephone, to send queries as text messages.Connection time between the wireless device and the Internet systems maybe less than what is required for WAP; however, the results returned arein plain text with no URLs, no web pages, and no images.

SUMMARY

In general, this document discusses systems and methods for providinginformation in overloaded connections that have information that wouldordinarily be transmitted in multiple connections. In this way, fewerconnections may be made and less latency introduced to a system.

In one implementation, a method of providing information responsive to arequest from a wireless communication device is disclosed. The methodcomprises receiving an information request from a mobile device andgenerating responsive information for the information request,transmitting a first portion of the responsive information to the mobiledevice in a first communication session, and transmitting a secondportion of the responsive information to the mobile device in a second,overloaded communication session. The overloaded communication sessionmay comprise a hypertext transfer protocol (HTTP) communication session,or a socket communication session, among many others. The informationrequest may comprise a search request.

In some implementations, the responsive information in the firstcommunication session may comprise information in a first search resulttype, and the responsive information in the second, overloadedcommunication session may comprise information in a plurality of searchresult types that differ from the first search result type. Also, thefirst communication session may occur before the second communicationsession, and it may be an overloaded communication session.

In another implementation, a method of transmitting requests andreceiving information responses using a mobile communication device isdisclosed. The method comprises overloading a connection between themobile communication device and a server, wherein the overloadingincludes transmitting a search request from the mobile communicationdevice to the server, receiving at the mobile communication device fromthe server a first set of results associated with the search request,and receiving at the mobile communication device from the server asecond set of results in an overloaded communication session associatedwith the search request. The receiving may be carried out by anon-browser application. In addition, at least a portion of the firstset of results may be displayed before the second set of results hasbeen fully received. Also, a selection of a result element may bereceived in response to display of the first set of results or thesecond set of results, and a telephone connection generated in responseto the selection.

In one implementation, a selection of a result element may be receivedin response to display of the first set of results or the second set ofresults, and transmitting a text message in response to the selection.Also, a selection of a result element may be received in response todisplay of the first set of results or the second set of results, and aweb page request in response to the selection. The receiving of thefirst set of results and receiving the second set of results may also beperformed by separate execution threads on the mobile communicationdevice.

In other implementations, the first set of results and the second set ofresults may relate to multiple different search types. The multiplesearch types may be selected from a group consisting of advertisements,images, web pages, maps, news, geographically specified (local) content,shopping, weather, and content resident on the mobile device. Also, themultiple search types may be displayed as display elements categorizedby search type, and each category may be displayed separately. Onesearch type may also be displayed with another search type. In addition,navigation between the multiple search types may include horizontalnavigation. Search requests for the multiple different search types mayalso be generated in response to entry by a user through one entry pointin a user interface.

In yet another implementation, a computer program product containingexecutable instructions that when executed cause a processor to performcertain operations is disclosed. Those operations include overloading aconnection between a mobile device and a server, wherein the overloadingcomprises transmitting a search request from the mobile device to theserver, receiving at the mobile device from the server a first set ofresults associated with the search request, and receiving at the mobiledevice from the server a second set of results associated with thesearch request.

In another implementation, a system for transmitting requests andreceiving responses using a wireless device comprises a connectionmodule that establishes a connection between a mobile device and aserver, a query module that transmits a search request from the mobiledevice to the server, and a means for separately receiving at the mobiledevice from the server a first and second set of results, wherein bothresults are associated with the search request.

A system for transmitting requests and receiving responses using awireless communication device is also disclosed. The system comprisesconnection module that establishes a connection between a mobile deviceand a server, a query module that transmits a search request from themobile device to the a server, a result download module at the mobiledevice that receives from the server a first portion of resultsassociated with the search request after a first time period andreceives a second portion of results associated with the search requestafter a second time period, and a display module at the mobile devicethat provides the first portion of results for display after the firsttime period and appends the second portion of results to the firstportion of results for display after the second time period.

Advantages of the systems and techniques described herein may includeany or all of the following: decreasing the wait time required for auser to view search results; decreasing connection overhead whennavigating through results of different search types; improvingnavigation between search results; providing a more efficient method fora user to enter a search request that returns multiple search types;providing result selection that generates a phone call; and providingresult selection that generates a text message.

The details of one or more implementations are set forth in theaccompanying drawings and the description below. Other features,objects, and advantages of the implementations will be apparent from thedescription and drawings, and from the claims.

DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS

FIG. 1 a is an exemplary conceptual diagram showing the establishment ofcommunication connections.

FIG. 1 b is an exemplary diagram of a system for sending transmissionsand receiving responses using and overloaded connection;

FIG. 2 is a flow chart of a method for receiving search requests andtransmitting responsive information by a server according to oneimplementation;

FIG. 3 is a flow chart of a method for overloading a connection by amobile device according to one implementation;

FIG. 4 is a block diagram with further details of the system shown inFIG. 1 a;

FIGS. 5 a-c are diagrams of an exemplary user interface (UI) that may begenerated by the mobile device shown in FIG. 1 a; and

FIGS. 6 a-c are flow charts of methods for selecting a search elementand performing a related action, each according to one implementation.

Like reference symbols in the various drawings indicate like elements.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION

FIG. 1 a is an exemplary conceptual diagram showing the establishment ofcommunication connections. In the implementation of FIG. 1 a, a system100 is shown by which a mobile device 102, such as a cellular telephone,may establish a connection 103 with a server 106 to send a searchrequest 104. The server 106 may respond by transmitting information 108associated with the search request 104, such as search results, to themobile device 102. The search request 104 may be a request for digitalinformation, such as web pages, maps, and images associated with thesearch terms. The server 106 may be a networked computing device, suchas an Internet server that implements a search engine.

In response to the search request 104, the server 106 may transmit theresponsive information 108 to the mobile device 102 using a set 105 ofoverloaded connections, which permits the server to send the informationin fewer than normal transmissions. After the server 106 receives thesearch request 104 in a first transmission indicated by an arrow 110,the server may send a first portion 113 of the responsive information108 to the mobile device 102 in a first overloaded communication, asshown by an arrow 112. The server 106 may then transmit a second portion115 of the responsive information 108 as part of a second overloadedcommunication, as shown by arrow 116.

The connections are “overloaded” because they carry more data than wouldnaturally be carried in a single connection. For example, where theresponsive information 108 contains results to a search request, theresults for web search, image search, and local search may be sent via asingle connection, where only the results for the immediately-selectedsearch type would normally be downloaded. Alternatively, certainportions of each type of search may be returned from a first connectionso that the material most-needed by a user is delivered first. Forexample, where the information transaction involves a search request,the first page of results for certain of the search styles (e.g., weband news) may be delivered in a first overloaded connection, while thefirst page of results (and perhaps other pages of theinitially-transmitted results) for other search styles (e.g., images)may be delivered in a second or other subsequent connections.

The particular material to be delivered in the first overloadedconnection may differ depending on the implementation, and may also bespecified by a user. For example, a user may prefer not to receive imagedata in a first overloaded connection because such data mightunnecessarily delay the first display of a search result or increasecosts to the user. A user might also prefer to see “local” styleresponses first, because the person is presumably looking more for localcontent when using a mobile device.

Sending the responsive information 108 in more than one transmission maydecrease the time a user has to wait before viewing the information 108,i.e., the “time to first impression.” For example, a user may use aclient on a cellular telephone to submit a search request for “donuts.”The client may establish a connection with an Internet server 106 andtransmit a search request to a search engine implemented at that server106. The search engine may then generate search results and send thefirst portion 113 of those results to the cellular telephone, which maydisplay the results to the user. While the user is viewing the firstportion 113 of search results, the search engine may send a secondportion 115 of search results to the cellular telephone.

The coordination of various transmissions may be configured asappropriate to meet the needs of a particular application. For example,a first transmission may not be overloaded or may be minimallyoverloaded so that the time-to-first-impression is short. Such anapproach may be appropriate where the user needs results quickly, andcan be expected to review the results relatively slowly (so that thesubsequent overloaded connections can complete before the user needsinformation from them).

Also, more than two connections can be made, and the number ofconnections can vary from time to time or download to download. Forexample, the amount of information to be included in a first connectionmay depend on a user's past viewing patterns, e.g., if the user isconstantly trying to access follow-up information before it isdownloaded, the first connection can be more fully overloaded in thefuture. Likewise, the server 106 may determine the total amount ofinformation, and divide the load into the appropriate number ofconnections, such as based on a predetermined rule set. As one example,a particular connection size may be established for the first, second,and subsequent connections (e.g., with each subsequent connectioninvolving a larger transmission), and the server 106 may package theinformation for each connection so as to approximate the variousconnection sizes. Thus, connections may be divided-up in a manner thatallows for substantially predetermined download times, and times toimpression, for various parts of the delivered results.

Information transmission may also be triggered by an event other than anexplicit user request (e.g., a search term submission). For example,information transmission may be triggered by passing of time (e.g., adownload at a particular time each day, such as for news, traffic, orweather information) or by locational changes by the mobile device(e.g., GPS-detected movement can trigger a transmission of trafficinformation).

FIG. 1 b is an exemplary diagram of a system 150 for sendingtransmissions and receiving responses using an overloaded connection.The system 150 may be used to implement the system 100 shown in FIG. 1a. A number of mobile devices in the form of cellular telephones 102a-102 c are shown for use by users of the system 150. Other appropriatemobile devices, such as PDAs, laptop computers, or other communicationdevices may also be used. Cellular telephone 102 a may establish aconnection 103 with the Internet server 106 a using software, such as asearch client that is installed on the cellular telephone 102 a. Thecellular telephone 102 a may be communicatively connected to a network,such as the Internet 152, and may thereby communicate with other devicessuch as the server 106 a. The cellular telephone 102 a may connectdirectly or indirectly to the Internet 152. For example, the cellulartelephone 102 a may connect to a cellular telephone network (not shown)that is, in turn, connected to the Internet 152. Additionally, it mayuse technology such as Voice Over IP (VoIP). The communication flow forthe cellular telephones 102 a-102 c may be bidirectional so that theserver 106 a may receive information, such as commands, from thecellular telephones 102 a-102 c, and may also send information to thephone. More than one phone, such as phones 102 b and 102 c, maycommunicate with the server 106 a simultaneously or serially.

Additionally, cellular telephones 102 a-102 c may communicate with morethan one server. The phones 102 a-102 c may choose or be assigned aserver to communicate with based on the bandwidth available to thatserver. For example, the phones 102 a-102 b may send the server 106 a apacket of information to determine its response time. The server 106 amay return a response and, based on the time it takes to return theresponse, the phones 102 a-102 c may determine whether or not to send aquery to that server 106 a or to attempt to send the query to anotherserver, such as 106 b. Alternatively, the server 106 a may sendinformation including its status and the status of other servers. Forexample, the server 106 a may respond that it is too busy to handle therequest, but may transmit information identifying server 106 b that mayhandle the request. The particular phone could then contact theidentified server 106 b. In other embodiments, the server 106 a maydirectly pass the request to the server 106 b if it is too busy tohandle the request.

The user may enter the search terms in a textual or other format throughthe use of keys, buttons, a stylus, or any other appropriate features orcollection of features. For example, if the mobile device is a cellulartelephone, the user may enter the text by pressing telephone keys thatcorrespond to letters. Entry schemes, such as predictive text entry andtriple-tap entry may be used. In predictive text entry, a user entersone or more letters, and an application attempts to complete the words(and perhaps to clear up ambiguity in what letters were intended when auser pressed a numeric key) being entered based on previous entries or alocal dictionary that contains common words. Triple-tap entry mayrequire a user to press one or more telephone keys multiple times beforethe desired letter is selected from multiple letters associated withthat phone key. The user may then continue to enter letters until thecomplete word has been spelled.

The search results may be output in various manners. The output may bedisplayed on the cellular telephone's screen as text. Alternatively, theoutput may be audible, such as speech played from a speaker in thecellular telephone. In other implementations, the output may includevideo that is displayed on the cellular telephone's or other device'sscreen.

Referring to FIG. 1 a, in one implementation, the first portion 113 maybe a first type or style of search result, such as images (or a group ofmultiple types or styles). The second portion 115 may be a second typeof search results, such as web page URL's, or links Each portion may bean overloaded transmission, so that, for example, the first portion 113may include both web results and local results. The second portion 115may then include image results, news results, and groups results. Inaddition, desktop results may additionally be identified and retrievedfrom the device itself, such as from e-mails and other files stored inthe device. Thus, the desktop results may be retrieved at anyappropriate point, such as immediately after a search is executed, andwhile the first portion 113 is being delivered.

The user may view the initially transmitted information, such as images,while links to the web pages are transmitted to the cellular telephoneby the search engine. When the user finishes viewing the images, theuser may then view the links, which have been downloading in thebackground and will be ready for display once the user has reviewed theinitially-downloaded information. Alternatively, other pages of imagesmay be downloading in a second string while the user views the firstpage or pages of images. The user may be unaware of the overloadedtransmissions and the separate transmission of the search results.Additionally, any overhead time associated with establishing aconnection to receive different types of search results may be decreasedby overloading the connection.

In another implementation, the client may download a first amount of aparticular type of search results as the first portion 113 and a secondamount of the same type of search results as the second portion 115. Forexample, the search engine may transmit 10 web page links. While theuser is viewing the first 10 web page links, the search engine maytransmit a second 10 web page links. The user may be unaware of theseparate transmissions of the web page links. Instead, it may appear tothe user as if the entire 20 web page links have been downloadedsimultaneously. Where overloaded connections are employed, the mobiledevice 102 may download multiple different types of information in eachconnection, such as by first downloading the ten best web results andthe ten best news results in the first connection.

FIG. 2 is a flow chart of a method 200 for receiving search requests andtransmitting responsive information by a server. The server may besimilar to the server 106 a or 106 b shown in FIG. 1 a. For example, acomputer program product such as a machine-readable medium may includeinstructions that cause a processor of the server 106 to performoperations comprising the stages of method 200.

At stage 210, a search request is received and responsive information,such as a search result, is generated. For example, a client on a mobiledevice may transmit a search request including search terms to a server.A search engine implemented at the server may then generate searchresults based on the search request. Other requests may also be receivedfrom the client, and related information transmitted to the client.

At stage 220, a first portion of the responsive information istransmitted to the mobile device in a first communication session. Forexample, the server may transmit a first portion of the search resultsto the cellular telephone for displaying. The first portion may includea first type of results, such as links to web pages. The first portionmay also be transmitted in an overloaded connection, such as aconnection that transmits web, news, and local results, or a connectionthat transmits web results along with some or all of the content fromthose results. For example, where one of the search results is the CNNhome page, the additional information in the overloaded connection couldinclude the text from the CNN home page, so that a user can see certaininformation immediately if they click on the “CNN” link from theirsearch results.

An operation “initiate second transmission instruction?” is performed atstage 230. The server may receive an instruction from the mobile deviceto initiate transmission of the second portion. For example, the servermay receive an instruction to begin transmitting the second portion ofthe search results. This may be received after transmission of the firstportion. The server may also simply begin sending the second portiononce it has finished sending the first portion. A new connection may bemade for the second portion, particularly where completion of the firstconnection is necessary to make the information transmitted in the firstconnection usable in part or in full by the mobile device.

Alternatively, the instruction may be received before the transmissionof the first portion is complete. If such an instruction is received,stage 240 may be executed. Otherwise, the method may continue to executestage 230 until the instruction is received.

An instruction to execute the second transmission may be received fromthe mobile device, for example, where the user has reviewed theinitially-transmitted information and has selected to review additionalinformation. For example, where the first transmission transmitted weband image data, and a user selects a tab to review news data, thatselection can cause the second transmission to occur, including bycausing any other ongoing transmission to end (or be interruptedtemporarily), if appropriate. If the second transmission includes theinformation the user has now requested, the connection for thattransmission may end as soon as the newly requested information has beendownloaded.

Any information not delivered from a connection that has beeninterrupted before its completed may be transmitted in any otherappropriate manner. For example, the remaining information may beincluded at the beginning of the next connection, at the end of the nextconnection, or as part of another connection (such as at the end of thelast connection). Also, connections that have not yet been made can becompleted when other connections have been completed.

An instruction to execute the second transmission may also be generatedby a server itself. For example, if a mobile device does not transmitany information during the transmission for a first connection, theserver may begin transmitting information for the second connectionimmediately.

An operation “transmitting the second portion” is performed in a stage240. As noted, a second portion of the responsive information istransmitted to the mobile device after the first communication session.For example, while the user of the cellular telephone is viewing thepreviously transmitted search results that included the links to webpages, the server may transmit a second type of search results to thecellular telephone, such as links to images. The user may then view thelinks to images without having to initiate a new connection to thesearch engine implemented at the server. The same connection may be usedas an overloaded connection for sending both the Web links and the imageresults. When all information has been transmitted, the process may end.

In FIG. 2, the first portion is shown as simply transmitted while thesecond portion is shown as being transmitted by an overloaded session.It is also possible for the first transmission to be overloaded and thesecond not overloaded, or for both or neither to be overloaded. Inaddition, more than two transmissions may occur when appropriate,particularly where transmissions are interrupted (e.g., by a userselecting an already-transmitted item) and need to be picked up again.Whether a particular transmission is overloaded, and the extent to whichit is overloaded (e.g., whether two normal transmissions are combinedinto one or three or more are combined into one) will depend on theparticular needs of an application and the capabilities of a system. Forexample, it may be preferable not to overload a first connection by toomuch or else the “time to first impression” may be impacted negatively.The degree to which each connection is overloaded or not overloaded canalso be adjusted dynamically, such as by observing whether a particularuser repeatedly moves quickly from one search type to another. If suchbehavior is observed, those types may be made part of a single firstoverloaded connection, for example.

FIG. 3 is a flow chart of a method 300 for overloading a connection by amobile device. In general, this flow chart shows operations occurring ata mobile client device. The mobile device may be similar to the mobiledevice 102 shown in FIG. 1 a. For example, a computer program productsuch as a machine-readable medium may include instructions that cause aprocessor of the mobile device 102 to perform operations comprising thestages of method 300.

An operation “transmitting a search request” is performed in a stage310, at which a search request is transmitted from a mobile device to aserver. For example, the user may enter search terms in a search clientinstalled on a cellular telephone. The cellular telephone may transmit asearch request including the search terms to a search engine implementedat a server.

An operation “receiving a first set of results” is performed in a stage320. The mobile device receives from the server a first set of resultsassociated with the search request. For example, a cellular telephonemay receive titles and hyperlinks to web pages related to the searchterms entered by the user. The titles and hyperlinks may be generated bya search engine implemented at the server and may be part of a largernumber of titles and hyperlinks generated in response to the searchrequest.

An operation “display the first portion as received” is performed in astage 330. The first portion may be displayed as it is received by themobile device. For example, the first title and hyperlink may bedisplayed as the remaining nine titles and links are being downloaded bythe cellular telephone. Also, the display may not, in appropriatecircumstances, occur until a certain part of the transmissions has beenreceived or all of the transmission has been received.

An operation “finished receiving” is performed in stage 340. If themobile device has completed receiving the first portion of theresponsive information, it may initiate a transmission to the serverindicating the mobile device can accept a second portion of theresponsive information. Otherwise, the device continues to receive thefirst portion of the responsive information. For example, a searchclient installed on the cellular telephone may determine whether thefirst set of titles and hyperlinks have downloaded. If they aredownloaded, the search client may transmit information to the server 106indicating that the second portion of web links may be transmitted tothe cellular telephone. However, if the search client determines thatthey have not completely downloaded, it may continue the download.

An operation “receiving a second set of results” is performed in a stage350. The mobile device receives from the server a second set of resultsassociated with the search request. For example, if the responsiveinformation generated from the search request includes two sets oftitles and hyperlinks and the server has previously transmitted thefirst set, the server may transmit the additional second set in a secondoverloaded communication session (including by transmitting the secondset of web results, a second set of images results, and a second set oflocal results).

An operation “append second portion to first portion and display” isperformed in stage 360. After the second portion of responsiveinformation is received by the client, the second portion may beappended to the first portion and displayed. For example, the client inthe mobile device may append the second set of titles and hyperlinks tothe first set and refresh the cellular telephone display, or mayotherwise display any requested information that has been downloadedimmediately. A refreshed screen may show both sets of hyperlinks andtitles. The two sets may not be visible at the same time, but may beaccessed through user interface components, such as a scroll bar, a dropdown list, a selected a tabbed panel, or any combination thereof.

FIG. 4 is a block diagram with further details of the system 100 shownin FIG. 1 a. The mobile device 102 and the server 106 may establish aconnection 103 for transmission and receipt of a search request andinformation responsive to the search request 104. The mobile device maybe a mobile device, such as the cellular telephone shown in FIG. 1 b,and the server may be an Internet server that hosts a search engine,such as the server 106 also shown in FIG. 1 b. The cellular telephonemay include search client software installed on the cellular telephoneto execute methods, such as the methods shown in FIGS. 2 and 3. Thesoftware may include a connection module 402, a query module 404, aresult download module 406, and a display module 408.

The query module 404 may accept user input, such as search terms,geographical information, and demographic information, from a userinterface or other components. The connection module 402 may initiate apoint of contact with the server 106 to establish the connection 103between the mobile device 102 and the server 106. The query module 404may transmit a search request 104 to the connection module 402, whichmay transmit the request 104 to the server 106. The result downloadmodule 406, which receives search results from the server 106, and thedisplay module 408, which displays those results, will be discussed ingreater detail below.

In one implementation, the search request 104 and the transmission ofthe search results 108 may use a hypertext transfer protocol (http)connection to exchange information. For example, the request may be inthe form of a POST command, which may cause the server to respond bysending the search results in HTML (Hypertext Markup Language) or XML(Extensible Markup Language) format.

In another implementation, a socket connection may be used to exchangethe search request 104 and the corresponding search results 108. Use ofthe socket connection may permit a user to see the search results asthey are received by the mobile device 102 instead of requiring the userto wait for the entire download of the first portion 113 of results tocomplete before the mobile device displays them. Additionally, users maybe able to interrupt the connection if they choose to cancel a search.Any other appropriate type of data connection may also be used.

The server 106 may include a search engine 410, which can use the searchrequest 104 to generate the search results, or response information 108,which may include different search types 109, such as advertisements,images, web pages, maps, news, entertainment content, geographicallyspecified (local) content, shopping content, weather information, andURL's to any of the previously mentioned items. Entertainmentinformation may include results, such as movie times, ball game times,local clubs, and bands scheduled to perform in the user's locality.Shopping content may include results such as product prices, a listingof stores that carry a particular product, product reviews, and itemsthat may be ordered online. Geographically specified content may includeresults, such as contact information for local businesses that sellproducts or services related to the search request.

After receiving the search request 104, the server 106 may pass it tothe search engine 410 to generate the search results 108. The searchresults 108 may include the first portion 113 and the second portion115, as discussed above. In one implementation, the first portion 113may be results of a first search type and the second portion 115 may beresults of a second search type, or each portion may include results formultiple different search types. For example, as shown in FIG. 4, thefirst portion 113 may include results from the search type “web pagelinks” 109 a, and the second portion 115 may include results from thesearch type “images” 109 b. The first portion 113 may also includesresults from multiple search types, while the second portion may alsoinclude results from multiple search types.

In a second implementation (not shown in FIG. 4), the first portion 113may include a first amount of one search type, and a second portion 115may include a second amount of the same search type. For example, thefirst portion 113 may include a first set of URL's for images, and thesecond portion 115 may include a second set of URL's for images.Additionally, the first portion 113 may contain results ranked as morerelevant than the results included in the second portion 115. Forexample, the server 106 may determine that one set of links is morerelevant to the search request than another set of links. The server maythen include the more relevant set of links in the first portion 113 andthe less relevant set of links in the second portion 115 (including witha first set of links for multiple different search types in one or bothportions). The user may be able to view the more relevant set of linksfirst.

After generating or partially generating the search results 108 inresponse to the search request transmitted from the mobile device 102,the server 106 may transmit the first portion 113 to the mobile device,as shown by the arrow 110. The mobile device 102 may receive the firstportion 113 at the result download module 406 using the connectionmodule 402, which communicates with the server 106, to receive the firstportion 113.

The first portion 113 may be sent to the display module 408 for displayas part of the mobile device's user interface 412 (UI). The UI mayinclude several tabbed panels. For example, as shown in FIG. 4, theremay be a tabbed panel for web search results 108 a, a tabbed panel forimage results 108 b, a tabbed panel for news results 108 c, and a tabbedpanel for shopping results 108 d. Although not shown, other tabbedpanels may be accessible for search types previously described and otherappropriate search types.

Each tabbed panel may contain several result elements 414 a-414 n. Forexample, a result element 414 a may include a title and URL of a websitefor a dog kennel called “Rover Come Over” and a brief description (a“snippet”) of the content of the website. The result element may alsocontain geographical and contact information. For example, the locationand phone number of the kennel may be included in the result element.

While a user is viewing the result elements 414 a-414 n on the UI 412,the server 106 may transmit a second portion 115 of the search results108 to the download module 406, which may, in turn, transmit them to thedisplay module 408. The display module 408 may append the second portion115 to the first portion 113 of the search results and refresh the UIdisplay so that both portions are visible to a user.

In one implementation, the download of the first and second portions113, 115 may be initiated by the result download module 406.Additionally, the downloads may be executed as separate threads, whichpermits them to operate simultaneous with each other and with otheroperations. For example, the download module 406 may include a processthat initiates a download thread that passes a search request to theserver 106 and receives the first portion 113. When the first downloadthread completes, the first portion 113 may be passed to the displaymodule 408 and a second thread may be initiated to download the secondportion 115. This thread may run as a background process simultaneouswith other operations, such as scrolling through the first portion 113of results and selection of one of the result elements. When the seconddownload thread is complete, the result download module 406 may transmitthe second portion 115 of results to the display module 408 for displaywith the first portion of results.

In another implementation, an execution of the download threads forportions 113, 115 may overlap. For example, the second download threadmay be initiated simultaneously with the first download thread or beforethe completion of the first thread. This may occur when the server 106or a client on the mobile device 102 determines there is enoughbandwidth to send both portions simultaneously. In otherimplementations, the second download thread may be staggered with thefirst download thread to increase efficiency by eliminating ormitigating any gaps between the download of the first portion 113 and ofthe second portion 115. Overlapping threads may also be used when thefirst thread is interrupted before it is complete, such as by a requestthat starts the second thread. The first thread may be completed afterthe second thread is complete or at another appropriate point (e.g., ifthe user seeks information from the end of the first thread before thesecond thread is complete).

In another embodiment, more than two threads may be used in theoverloaded connection 103. For example, three threads may be used; onethat downloads web link search types, one that downloads image searchtypes, and one that downloads advertisements. Additionally, more thantwo threads may be used to download the same type of results. Forexample, the first thread may download ten images that the server 106determines to be the most relevant to the search request. The secondthread may download another ten images determined to be the second mostrelevant to the search request, and the third thread may download tenmore images that may be less relevant than either the first or secondset of images.

The addition of the second portion 115 of search results may not beapparent to a user because a part or all of the first portion 113 ofsearch results may fill the user interface. To view the additionalresults 115, the user may have to use a scroll bar or select a differenttabbed panel. For example, the first portion 113 may include web pagelinks and the second portion 115 may include images. A user could viewthe first portion on the “web” tabbed panel 108 a and could switch tothe “image” tabbed pane 108 b to view the second portion 115. The firstportion 113 may alternatively be a first set of search results formultiple search types (e.g., web, news, and local) while the secondportion 115 may be a first set of search results for other search types(e.g., images, shopping, blogs, etc.).

In another implementation, as shown in FIG. 4, The first portion 113could be results 414 a-c, and the second portion 115 may be the results414 d-f. The results 414 a-c could fill the display area of the “web”tabbed panel 108 a. To view the results 414 d-f, the user would use thescroll bar 420 to scroll down to those results.

In one implementation, the query module 104, the result download module406, the display module 408, and the connection module 402 may becomponents of a non-browser application 416 installed on the mobiledevice 102. The application 416 may interface with a browser (not shown)that is also installed on the mobile device 102 through an applicationprogram interface (API). The application 416 may display a result, suchas a web page URL, and permit a user to select it. The application maythen pass the selection information to the browser using the API, andthe browser may request and display the web page on the mobile device102. The application may also include components to allow the display ofweb-based documents and basic navigation through those documents (e.g.,forward and backward buttons, and selection of hyperlinks). The displaymay be complete or limited, e.g., the display of a stripped-down versionof the web-based documents (e.g., removal of images or replacement ofimages with text URL's). As such, the application can provide for basicfunctionality without the overhead of a full browser, and may then handover control to a browser if more advanced features are needed. Inanother implementation, a full browser may be implemented in the sameclient that includes the query, the result download, display, andconnection modules.

FIGS. 5 a-5 c are diagrams of an exemplary user interface (UI) that maybe generated by the mobile device 102 shown in FIG. 1 a. FIG. 5 a showsa UI, such as the UI 412 shown in FIG. 4, which contains text box 502for entering search terms used in the search request 104. The UI 412 mayalso include additional text entry boxes for geographical information,such as text box 504. Information including a user's street, city,state, and zip code may be entered in the text box 504 and included inthe search request 104.

In some implementations a user may only need to enter this informationonce. After that, the information may be stored on the mobile device orat the server 106. Alternatively, a user may not need to enter theinformation at all if the mobile device has GPS capabilities. In thiscase, the mobile device may generate the geographical information tosend with the search request. A search button 506 may initiatetransmission of the search request to the server. To select the searchbutton, a user may manipulate buttons on the mobile device, such as thecellular telephone's keys.

The user may enter the search terms in one entry point and receivemultiple search types. For example, a user may enter the term “donut” inthe text box 502. After receiving the search request, the server maygenerate and transmit search types, such as images of donuts visible inthe “image” tab panel, links to local donut shops visible in the “local”tab panel, and driving directions to the donut shops closest to theuser's location visible in the “maps” tab panel.

Additionally, an image or images may be displayed in the area 508 of theUI 412. The images may be stored in local memory, and may includeadvertisements associated with previously returned search results. Inanother implementation, the image may include an identifier, such as thesoftware manufacturer of the installed application or the name of theuser. After the search is initiated, and while it is being processed, astatus image 518 may be displayed as shown in FIG. 5 b. The status image518 may also be stored in local memory, and may change as results aredelivered so as to provide a user with an indication of the progress ofthe information delivery.

FIG. 5 c is a diagram of an exemplary UI after the mobile device 102receives the search results 108. In the depicted implementation, theresult elements 510 a-c may be displayed in a result area 512.Additionally, area 516 a may display the type of results returned, witheach type accessible by selecting the desired tab of a tabbed panel.Area 516 b may include the search terms entered and area 516 c maycontain advertising or other promotional material related to the searchresults. The advertising search type shown in the area 516 c may bevisible regardless of which tabbed panel is selected for viewing. Aseparate tabbed panel may also be provided for promotional material suchas advertisements and other similar material.

A user may manipulate buttons (not shown) on the mobile device to employa scroll bar 514 to scroll through the result elements. Additionally,the user may manipulate a button to move though the result elements oneelement at a time. To navigate between search types, a user maymanipulate the same or a different button to select a different tab.Selection of a different tab may replace the currently displayed resultelements of one type with result elements of another type. For example,if the current tabbed panel shows web page links and a user pushes acellular telephone key that selects the image tab, result elementsassociated with the image panel may be displayed. Switching betweensearch types may be accomplished through the horizontal navigationperformed by the user in the tab selection.

In one implementation, the search elements 510 a-c displayed in the area512 may have several properties and initiate different actions whenselected. FIGS. 6 a-c are flow charts of methods 600, 630, and 660 forselecting a search element and performing a related action, eachaccording to one implementation. For example, a computer program productmay include instructions that cause a processor to perform operationscomprising the stages of method 600. As shown in FIG. 6 a, the method600 includes the following stages.

An operation “displaying result element with phone number” is performedin a stage 602. A result element is displayed, wherein the resultelement includes a phone number property. For example, the mobile devicemay receive the result element 510 a (shown in FIG. 5 c) for a storenamed “Donuts a Us.” The element 510 a may have a phone number as aproperty, which may be displayed along with the result in the resultarea 512, or which may be associated with a hyperlink or other selectionelement under the displayed title.

An operation “receiving a selection of the result element” is performedin a stage 604. A selection of a result element is received from theuser in this stage. For example, the user may manipulate buttons on thecellular telephone to highlight and select the “Donuts a Us” element 510a. Alternatively, the user may be able to highlight the result and thenselect among several properties of the result. For example, the “Donutsa Us” element 510 a may have several phone numbers associated with it,such as a number for the cinnamon twist baker and a number for the LongJohn baker. A user could select the number for the baker with which theuser desires to speak.

An operation “generating a telephone connection” is performed in a stage606. A telephone connection is generated in response to the selection.For example, when a user selects the cinnamon twist baker's phonenumber, the property may be passed to an external application or aninternal module that generates a telephone call to that phone number. Inone implementation, after the phone call is complete, the user mayreturn to the result area 512 and select additional properties as shownby an arrow 608.

Similarly, the methods 630 and 660 may be implemented as shown in FIGS.6 b and 6 c. For example, a computer program product may includeinstructions that cause a processor to perform operations comprising thestages of method 630 and method 660. As shown in FIG. 6 b, the method630 includes the following stages.

An operation “displaying result element with URL” is performed in stage632. A result element is displayed, wherein the result element includesa URL. This stage may be similar to stage 602 of FIG. 6 a, but theproperty displayed with the result element may be a URL of a web page.For example, the search result 510 b for a web page titled “Go Nuts forDonuts!” has a URL as a property.

An operation “receiving a selection of the result element” is performedin stage 634. This may be similar to the stage of 604, but the propertyselected may be a URL.

An operation “requesting a web page” is performed in stage 636. The webpage may be requested in response to the user's selection. For example,when a user selects the search result 510 b, the URL may be passed to abrowser program or module that may request the associated web page froma remote server and display it.

FIG. 6 c shows a method 660 for selecting a result element for sending aSMS (short message service) message according to one implementation. Themethod 660 includes the following stages;

An operation “displaying result element with SMS address” is performedin stage 662. This stage may be similar to stages 602 and 632, but aresult element is displayed, where the result element includes a SMSaddress. For example, the search result 510 c has a SMS address for the“Donut Man” and prods the user to IM (Instant Message) this individual.

An operation “receiving a selection of the result element” is performedin stage 664. This stage may also be similar to the stage of 604 and634, but the property selected may be a SMS address.

An operation “sending text message” is performed in stage 666. Forexample, when a user selects the SMS address associated with the Donutman, the address may be passed to a text messaging program or module.The user may be presented with a text area to input a message. Afterentering the message, it may be transmitted to the individual identifiedby the SMS address.

In one implementation of methods 630 and 660, the user may return to theresult area 512 and select additional properties after the web page isviewed or the text message is sent as shown by arrows 638 and 668,respectively.

In other implementations not shown in FIGS. 6 a-c, a result element mayhave more than one property. For example, an element may have a URL anda phone number. The user may select either of the properties to performthe actions previously described. Additionally, other result elementsmay have properties such as e-mail addresses, fax numbers, links toexecutable programs, and links to digital files.

A number of implementations have been described. Nevertheless, it willbe understood that various modifications may be made without departingfrom the spirit and scope of this application. For example, optionalstages 330 and 340 of FIG. 3, which describe displaying the resultelements as they are downloaded and initiating a second download of theadditional search results 108, respectively, may be removed. Other stepsin the described processes may also be eliminated or combined asappropriate, or performed sequentially or simultaneously, and additionalsteps may be added. Additionally, the transmission of the first portion113 and second portion 115 may be simultaneous, partially overlapping,or sequential. Accordingly, other implementations are within the scopeof the following claims.

1. (canceled)
 2. A computer-implemented method comprising: identifying, by a computing device, data that is responsive to a data request; identifying at least a first portion of the data and a second portion of the data; transmitting, by the computing device during a first communication session at a first time, the first portion of the data to a mobile device for display on the mobile device; and transmitting, by the computing device and during a second communication session at a second time after the first time, the second portion of the data to the mobile device for display on the mobile device, wherein the second communication session contains more data than a largest communication session that accords with a standard under which the first communication session occurs.
 3. The method of claim 2, wherein the second communication session comprises a hypertext transfer protocol (HTTP) communication session.
 4. The method of claim 2, wherein the second communication session comprises a socket communication session.
 5. The method of claim 2, wherein the data request comprises a search request.
 6. The method of claim 5, wherein the data in the first communication session comprises information in a first search result type, and the data in the second communication session comprises information in a plurality of search result types that differ from the first search result type.
 7. The method of claim 2, wherein at least some of the first portion of the data is transmitted to the mobile device for display by the mobile device before transmission of the second portion of the data is complete.
 8. The method of claim 2, wherein the first portion of the data comprises a first type of data and the second portion of the data comprises a second type of data different from the first type of data.
 9. The method of claim 2, further comprising receiving, from the mobile device, an instruction to execute transmission of the second portion of the data after the first portion of the data has been fully transmitted, wherein transmitting the second portion of data is performed in response to receiving the instruction.
 10. The method of claim 2, further comprising receiving, from the mobile device, an instruction to execute transmission of the second portion of the data before the first portion of the data has been fully transmitted, wherein transmitting the second portion of data is performed in response to receiving the instruction.
 11. The method of claim 2, wherein the first communication session is interrupted, and wherein the second communication session includes data that was not included in the first communication session.
 12. A method, comprising: overloading a connection between the mobile communication device and a server, wherein the overloading includes: transmitting a request for data from the mobile communication device to the server; receiving, at the mobile communication device and from the server, a first portion of data associated with the request; displaying, on the mobile communication device, the first portion of data associated with the request; after displaying at least some of the first portion of data, receiving, at the mobile communication device from the server, a second portion of data in a communication session associated with the request, wherein the second portion of data contains more data than a largest communication session that accords with a standard under which the communication session occurs; and displaying, on the mobile communication device, the second portion of data.
 13. The method of claim 12, wherein the receiving is carried out by a non-browser application.
 14. The method of claim 12, further comprising receiving a selection of a result element in response to display of the first portion of data or the second portion of data, and generating a telephone connection in response to the selection.
 15. A non-transitory computer storage medium encoded with a computer program, the program comprising instructions that when executed by one or more computer devices cause the one or more computing devices to perform operations, comprising: identifying data that is responsive to a data request; identifying at least a first portion of the data and a second portion of the data; transmitting, during a first communication session at a first time, the first portion of the data to a mobile device for display on the mobile device; and transmitting, during a second communication session at a second time after the first time, the second portion of the data to the mobile device for display on the mobile device, wherein the second communication session contains more data than a largest communication session that accords with a standard under which the first communication session occurs.
 16. The non-transitory computer storage medium of claim 15, wherein the second communication session comprises a hypertext transfer protocol (HTTP) communication session.
 17. The non-transitory computer storage medium of claim 15, wherein the data request comprises a search request.
 18. The non-transitory computer storage medium of claim 15, wherein at least some of the first portion of the data is transmitted to the mobile device for display by the mobile device before transmission of the second portion of the data is complete.
 19. The non-transitory computer storage medium of claim 15, wherein the first portion of the data comprises a first type of data and the second portion of the data comprises a second type of data different from the first type of data.
 20. The non-transitory computer storage medium of claim 15, the operations further comprising: receiving, from the mobile device, an instruction to execute transmission of the second portion of the data after the first portion of the data has been fully transmitted, wherein transmitting the second portion of data is performed in response to receiving the instruction.
 21. The non-transitory computer storage medium of claim 15, the operations further comprising: receiving, from the mobile device, an instruction to execute transmission of the second portion of the data before the first portion of the data has been fully transmitted, wherein transmitting the second portion of data is performed in response to receiving the instruction. 